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| Timothy P. Daniel |
| Senior Vice President, NERA |
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Dr. Daniel’s practice focuses primarily on antitrust and competition issues, such as the economic effects of mergers, tying, and exclusive dealing. Since joining NERA, he has presented economic analyses to the Federal Trade Commission, the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, and state-level officials in a broad variety of industries. He also has testified before the South African Competition Tribunal and in U.S. District Court. Prior to joining NERA, Dr. Daniel served as the Assistant Director for Antitrust in the Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau of Economics. In that capacity, Dr. Daniel conducted and supervised the agency’s economic analysis in pending merger, nonmerger (e.g., exclusive dealing), and intellectual property (e.g., patent pooling) investigations across a broad array of industries. Dr. Daniel also held managerial positions in the Bureau of Economics’ Division of Economic Policy Analysis, where he conducted and supervised studies of a variety of industries, including transportation, telecommunications, and energy. Dr. Daniel represented the FTC on the task force that developed the Antitrust Guidelines for the Licensing of Intellectual Property, which were issued jointly by the FTC and Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division in April 1995. While with the FTC, and subsequently with NERA, he has developed the economic analysis in matters with a significant intellectual property component, such as matters involving the pharmaceutical industry. Dr. Daniel has published on issues relating to business practices and regulations that affect consumers and competition. His writings have appeared as Federal Trade Commission Staff Reports in the Journal of Regulatory Economics, Electricity Journal, and Antitrust Magazine.
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